ICW Urges KPK to Announce Cabinet Members' Compliance with LHKPN Reporting
JAKARTA, KOMPAS.com - Indonesia Corruption Watch (ICW) has requested the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) to announce the names of Cabinet Merah Putih members who have not submitted their 2025 State Organiser Wealth Report (LHKPN). “ICW urges the KPK to announce as soon as possible the names of Cabinet Merah Putih members who have not reported or are late in reporting their LHKPN,” said ICW Advocacy Division member Yassar Aulia in a written statement on Wednesday (1/4/2026). This demand was made by ICW because there are 26 Cabinet Merah Putih members suspected of not having reported or being late in reporting their LHKPN. “If not done, ICW fears that LHKPN reporting could be taken lightly by state organisers as merely an administrative formality,” he stated. Based on ICW’s investigation via the official KPK LHKPN website, President Prabowo Subianto, 14 ministers, and 12 deputy ministers of the Cabinet Merah Putih are suspected of not having reported or at least being late in reporting their LHKPN. “Because there is potential that the information provided by the e-lhkpn website does not accurately represent the current situation,” he said. The KPK revealed that as of 26 March 2026, 87.83 per cent or around 337,340 out of a total of 431,882 State Organisers (PN) or Reporting Obligors (WL) have reported their assets in the periodic 2025 State Organiser Wealth Report (LHKPN). “The KPK urges PN/WL who have not yet reported to immediately submit their LHKPN before the deadline on 31 March 2026,” said KPK Spokesperson Budi Prasetyo in his statement on Sunday (29/3/2027). Budi stated that his institution appreciates the progress of the reporting compliance rate, which continues to show a positive trend. He said this achievement reflects the increasing awareness of State Organisers in upholding the principles of transparency and accountability as part of corruption prevention efforts. Budi explained that the LHKPN is an important instrument in building the integrity of State Organisers. “Timely and accurate reporting enables it to serve as an early detection tool for potential corruption such as conflicts of interest, while also being a form of accountability to the public regarding the management of owned assets,” he said.